Bernstein hearing: The Press Release

Declan McCullagh declan at eff.org
Mon Sep 23 14:50:11 PDT 1996


On Sun, 22 Sep 1996, Timothy C. May wrote:

> If California were to, say, ban speech critical of women's or homosexual's
> rights, would not the First Amendment trump this attempt?

Not necessarily.

The Supreme Court has upheld Title VII's ban on workplace "harassment." 
The Court said it occured when "discriminatory intimidation, ridicule, and
insult" in a workplace create an uncomfortable "working environment." 

Then there's public accomodation law, under which the (I recall) Greek
owner of a privately-operated diner was held liable for using the word
"nigger" where a black woman could overhear. 

Clearly, speech that makes someone uncomfortable must be banned by the 
government.

-Declan

(More on some of this at http://joc.mit.edu/)


// declan at eff.org // I do not represent the EFF // declan at well.com //







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